“These aren’t my children,” the husband squealed, “Lada, they’re… dark-skinned! Who did you have them from?”

“These aren’t my children,” the husband screamed, shaken to the depths of his soul, “Lada, they’re… dark-skinned! Who gave birth to them? Are you chea:ting?! Don’t come back to my house, don’t even try to cross the threshold! And don’t count on any material support – there won’t be any!”

Lada had an unlucky life.

She grew up in an orphanage where she had almost no friends, and those people who came to choose a child for adoption never drew attention to her. The only close person for Lada was her nanny Vera Pavlovna, who tried with all her might to find adoptive parents for Lada.

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Right before graduation, Vera Pavlovna decided to tell Lada the story of her arrival at the orphanage.

“You were about a year old when you were brought here,” Vera Pavlovna said softly, looking at the shelter building.

“I remember that day as if it were yesterday. It was spring, the snow had just melted, it was getting warm. We were cleaning the yard, collecting leaves, and suddenly a police car arrived. Whether this is true or not is unknown, but for some reason no one found you. And you stayed here.

She fell silent and looked at Lada:

– And that’s all? – asked Lada, – you don’t know anything about my parents?

Vera Pavlovna sighed heavily and lowered her head.

“Nothing at all,” she agreed, “nothing about parents or other relatives. It’s as if you fell out of the sky.”

After leaving the shelter, Lada studied in medical school.

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She was given a small apartment in a new building, and she got a job as a nurse at the regional hospital to blend her studies with work. It was there that fate brought her together with Anton, a therapist who immediately attract her attention.

There were old rumors that before Lada appeared, he had a romantic relationship with endocrinologist Kristina, a real beauty of the hospital. However, he loved Lada.

– What did he see in her? – asked Lera, one of Anton’s most persistent fans, – you can’t look at her without tears! Skinny as a stick, and dresses anyhow. Whoever undresses her starts crying!

“She’s from an orphanage,” giggled Nastya, her former rival, “everyone there is so weird, so silly.”

Lada heard these words, but pretended not to understand who they were talking about.

“Girls, get to work,” “and I have important news for you.”

After waiting until the nurses were out of sight, he continued:

— We’re having dinner at my parents’ tonight. It’ll be something like an introduction. Do you understand?

Lada was taken aback: already?! If Anton decided to introduce her to his parents, it meant that their relationship was progressed to marriage.

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In the evening, Anton took Lada, dressed in a smart dress, to his parents.

“So you grew up in an orphanage,” Anton’s father said

“that’s bad. Very bad. The absence of parents has an extremely negative effect on the formation of personality.”

Anton’s mother, Ida Vitalievna, a former cardiologist, supported her husband:

“Yes, it’s really not good,” she added, “and why, if it’s not a secret, has no one adopted you?”

“I don’t know,” she muttered, trying to hold back her tears, “it didn’t rely on me.”

“Excuse me, I have to go,” Lada couldn’t resist, “coursework…”

He walked her to the entrance and offered to give her a ride, but Lada refused.

“I’ll get there by taxi,” she muttered, greedily inhaling the cold air, “see you tomorrow.”

“Don’t pay attention to my old people,” he said, trying to calm her down, “they sometimes drive me crazy too. They both have difficult personalities.”

She wanted only one thing – to be as far away from this house as possible.

Fortunately, Anton no longer invited her to her parents. Soon he proposed to her and moved her in with him.

The wedding happened a month after the proposal, when Lada was two months pregnant.

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After the wedding, Lada continued working at the hospital, but when the baby began to grow, Anton suggested that she leave her job.

Three weeks before her due date, Lada gave birth to twin boys. When the midwife showed them to her, Lada froze in surprise: the children were dark-skinned, as if someone had dipped them in chocolate. The doctors were also surprized, and the doctor tried to calm Lada down.

“You know, my child was also born dark-colored,” the doctor said, “but after a few days everything went away, the skin color became normal.”

“If everything is okay with them, you won’t be able to hide them for long,” the doctor warned, “it’s better to prepare it in advance.”

And that’s what Lada did. She was ready to take a DNA test.

“So these are definitely my children?” Anton exclaimed when he saw the twins.

“If this is someone’s joke, it’s not funny at all!”

“I never expected you to be capable of something like this,” Anton said when they were alone. “I, a fool, believed you! I ran around the shops, got ready, and you… What a snake you are, Lada!”

– These are your children! What are we even talking about if I was always in your sight?

“Your parents were right about you,” he said slowly. “And I kept standing up for you. I don’t know who got you pregnant, but now seek help from him. I won’t live with you anymore!”

Vera Pavlovna came to pick up Lada from the hospital and took care of them at her home.

– Listen, why are your children like that? – Vera Pavlovna asked one day

– You’re white, Anton too. And they’re black. It’s somehow strange.

“Well, there you are too,” she drawled in a pained voice. “I thought that at least you would believe me…”

“Yes, I believe you, I believe you,” she smiled. “It’s just really amazing.”

But Lada had no time to be surprised. Anton had abandoned her and she could forget about work and school, as well as her previous life.

“It’s okay, we’ll manage somehow,” said Vera Pavlovna.

Vera Pavlovna took care of Igor and Sasha – that’s what Lada named the twins. She fussed over them as if they were her own grandchildren, and hardly let Lada near them.

“Rest,” Vera Pavlovna said every time Lada approached the children

“I thought about it a bit and decided this,” Vera Pavlovna said one evening, sitting in her chair with a newspaper.

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“Maybe your ancestors were dark-skinned? That happens sometimes. Dark-skinned people have light-skinned children.”

Lada looked up from the keyboard and grinned.

“My ancestors? Dark-skinned?” she responded skeptically. “Where from? That’s nonsense.”

Vera Pavlovna put the newspaper down with a terrible expression and asked to call a taxi. Putting on her glasses, she began to read aloud.

The article shared the story of an elderly local woman who had lost her daughter. According to her, she had drowned in a river when she was just over twenty, and she left behind a small child who was with her mother at the time of her passing. By the time rescuers and the police arrived, the child was gone. The woman asked anyone who knew anything to come forward.

– And why did you read this to me? – Lada got angry at Vera Pavlovna. – What does this have to do with me?

“Maybe it’s you she’s finding for,” she suggested cautiously.

“You were found near this river, after all. Did you hear who the missing girl was meeting? I think you should visit this woman and find out everything.”

Lada looked at the newspaper again.

“Lidiya Fyodorovna,” she read the woman’s name and patronymic. “She lives not far from here, on the next street.”

After waiting a few days, Lada decided to meet Lidiya Fyodorovna.

“You look so much like my Sveta,” she said as soon as Lada entered. “I’ve been waiting to hear from you for a long time…”

“Here, look,” she said, handing it to Lada. “They really are similar, aren’t they?”

Lada looked at the photo and it seemed to her that she was looking in the mirror. It was her in the photo, only her hair was light and her hairstyle was short.

“This is Sveta, my daughter,” explained Lidiya Fyodorovna.

“Tell me everything,” she asked, trying to speak more gently. “It’s very important to me. For me and my children.”

“It’s a long story,” she said.

“I don’t remember everything anymore, it was so long ago. Listen.

Lada’s mother was an average student at school, and then entered the university in the architecture department. During her studies, she met a guy. His name was Vincent, he was dark-skinned and came from France to study. Sveta helped him learn Russian, and eventually fell in love with him. Vincent also fell in love with her, and they planned to move in with him.

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Lidiya Fedorovna and her late husband Pavel tried their best to dissuade their daughter from marrying a foreigner. But Svetlana, stubbornly shaking her head, insisted that after completing her studies she would follow her lover.

Pavel, hearing this, became furious and insistently demanded that his daughter terminate the pregnancy. But Svetlana resolutely refused. In the end, her father kicked her out of the house. Svetlana left, and her parents never saw her again until one day her body was found in the river, and the official version was that she committed sui:cide.

“I knew that Svetlana had a girl,” said Lidiya Fyodorovna, her gaze fixed on one spot and her half-turned face towards Lada.

“Pavel passes away almost immediately after these events, he had a heart att.ack,” continued Lidiya Fyodorovna, lowering her head, “and I was paralyzed… Now I have not been able to walk for almost twenty years.

“Here,” she held out a tattered notebook, “is all that remains of your parents.”

Lada took the book and carefully hid it in her pocket.

Lada spent many years searching for her father. She sent out letters, posted ads on the Internet, made acquaintances with French people, hoping to find at least some clue.

Lada begged the woman to give him her contacts, and she agreed. Soon Vincent wrote, and then called. That’s how their communication began.

As it turned out, Vincent ran his own business successfully in France.

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“I didn’t start a family, and so I remained alone. I found out that your mother was no longer there when I was already back home. You look amazingly like her! You know, daughter, now for the first time in many years I feel happy. I know that I’m not alone. I have you and my grandchildren.”

Even after returning home, Vincent did not forget about his daughter. One day he called and asked her for her bank details. The woman immediately called her father back. Vincent explained:

– I want you to have everything you need! This amount will be enough for you to start your own business. You are a goal-oriented girl, I am sure that you will succeed.

Lada spent a long time choosing the direction for her business, and the choice fell on a private medical clinic. Thanks to the professionalism of the doctors, clients came in droves. In a few years, Lada won all competitors and achieved financial well-being.

There was no action of Anton during this time. He never called or buy something for the children. The divorce was finalized, and Lada did not continue to meet her husband, who did not believe her.

You Won’t Believe What Happened to Phoebe Cates After ‘Fast Times at Ridgemont High’!

Phoebe Cates starred in many movies, such as “Gremlins” and “Drop Dead Fred,” but she is best known for her famous pool scene in “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” from 1982.

However, Phoebe Cates left Hollywood more than 20 years ago. Nowadays, she has a regular job that she really enjoys.

Phoebe Belle Cates was born on July 16, 1963, in New York City. When she was a young girl, she went to private schools and studied ballet at Juilliard.

Acting was a big part of Phoebe’s family. Her father, Joe Cates, was a producer and director, her uncle was the president of the Director’s Guild, her brother used to be an actor, and her sister, Valerie, worked in theater.

Phoebe wanted to be a dancer when she was younger, but she had to stop after a knee injury.

At 14, Phoebe Cates started modeling and did pretty well. She was even on the cover of Seventeen magazine four times. But she didn’t really enjoy it and wanted to try something new.

“It was just the same thing, over and over. After a while, I did it solely for the money,” Phoebe said about her short modeling career.

One night, at a party at New York’s famous Studio 54, she met her film agent. After that, she trained with Robert Ravan, who founded The Actors’ Circle in New York.

“I just knew that I didn’t want to go to college. I thought if I could get a few movie roles, it would be a great way to avoid college. Seriously, it’s true,” Phoebe told The Daily Item in 1985.

Phoebe also trained with Alice Spivack at the H.B. Studios. She made her acting debut in 1982, playing Sarah in “Paradise.” Less than a year later, she starred in “Experienced” and then “Fast Times at Ridgemont High,” which featured the famous swimming pool scene.

“Fast Times at Ridgemont High” was a big hit with teenagers and became an important part of pop culture. It’s especially famous for one scene that Rolling Stone magazine called “the most memorable bikini-drop in cinema history.”

As a friend of mine said, that scene made a lot of teenage boys’ hearts beat faster than they should have!

In 1982, Phoebe shared her thoughts on acting. “In this business, if a girl wants a career, she has to be willing to strip. If you’ve got a good body, then why not show it?” she said.

“Fast Times at Ridgemont High” had an impressive cast, including future stars like Sean Penn, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Eric Stoltz, and Forest Whitaker.

Jennifer Jason Leigh reflected on the film, saying, “Well, it was a funny thing because we were all so young when we made it. Then it came out and was this big hit. You’d go to the theater, and people would say the lines along with it. People had obviously seen the movie over and over again,” she told The Daily News.

Later on, Phoebe continued working in theater and starred in “Private School” as Christine Ramsey in 1983. She also co-starred in Steven Spielberg’s “Gremlins” in 1984.

Phoebe met Kevin Kline, a well-known theater actor, while auditioning for the 1983 film “The Big Chill.” Although she didn’t get the role, she did meet her future husband.

Kevin was 16 years older than Phoebe, but they didn’t start dating until two years after they first met. Kevin hired Phoebe’s former assistant and asked for help to ask Phoebe out.

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In 1989, Phoebe Cates and Kevin Kline got married in New York City when she was 25 and he was 41. They had their first child, Owen Joseph, in 1991 and their daughter, Greta Simone, in 1994.

By 2017, the couple had been married for 27 years, and many people wondered how they stayed so happy together for so long. “We take care of the marriage,” Kline said.

Although Phoebe was successful, she decided to step away from acting after having their children. In the 1990s, she gradually left the entertainment industry.

In 1998, Phoebe told Playboy that she and her husband had agreed to alternate their acting jobs so that their children would always have one parent at home.

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Kevin Kline mentioned that even when it was Phoebe Cates’ turn to work, she often chose to stay home with their children. Although she did some acting occasionally, she was more often seen with her husband at red-carpet events, as he continued acting regularly.

In 2005, Phoebe opened a store called Blue Tree near Carnegie Hall. The store sells fragrances, clothing, and gifts.

Phoebe dedicated herself to running the store full-time, often working there personally or searching for new products to sell. Today, you can visit her store at 1283 Madison Avenue in New York City, located on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, where she also lives.

And just so you know, Phoebe still looks amazing!

Phoebe Cates attends the 71st Annual Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall on June 11, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Jim Spellman/WireImage)

What do you think of when you hear Phoebe Cates’ name? I always thought she was a pretty good actress, but the first things that come to mind are her shower scene in the cave in “Paradise” and the bikini scene in “Fast Times at Ridgemont High.”

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